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場庁舎 The Former Town Hall of Oihama English 文化財説明板,旧生浜町役場庁舎 The town of Oihama was originally located in the area which is the present-day Chuo Ward and Midori Ward. In 1889 (Meiji Year 22), the five villages of Kita-Oyumi, Minami-Oyumi, Hamano, Murata and Ariyoshi amalgamated to form Oyumi-Hamano Village, which was later renamed Oihama Village in 1925 (Taishō Year 14). In 1928 (Showa Year 3), the implementation of the town organization system bought about the establishment of Oihama Town. On the occasion
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. It features twelve different Kagura performances. All the performers wear masks and the performance is mimed. This type of Kagura is said to have been influenced by Edo Kagura and the dance is performed in a hall based on a Noh stage. There are dedicated Kagura performances during the New Year’s Festival (January), the Kinen Festival (February), the shrine’s annual festival and the Harvest Festival (November). 関連リンク 文化財説明板 このページの情報発信元 教育委員会事務局生
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times, Chiba has been a strategic location as it has easy access to both water and land transportation. This geographical advantage was one of the reasons why the Chiba Clan moved their headquarters from Ōji (located in what is now Midori Ward) to Inohana (now Chiba City) in 1126 (foundation year of the Daiji Period). In particular, a port called Chiba Minato utilized an inlet known as “Yūkiura” (an inlet near the mouth of the Miyako River that existed until the Middle Ages), as it served as a gateway to the sea for the medieval city of Chiba. It
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head family sided with the Kanto kanrei, while Yasutane along with Hara Tanefusa and other members of the Hara branch family sided with the Kamakura kubo. In 1455, Yasutane and his party captured the manor of the Chiba clan, leading to the collapse of the main family. In the following year, Yasutane was also slain by To Tsuneyori of the Chiba clan, who had come from Gujo District, Mino Province after receiving an order from the shogunate. Chiko-in Temple is believed to have been founded by Yasutane, after the fall of the manor. In this time period, it
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, when Chiba Tanenao and others perished at Tako Castle and Shima Castle (in Tako-machi), their remains were sent to Dainichi-ji Temple and the stone gorintos were built. In 1963, when park construction was underway, a bonsho (Buddhist bell) with an inscription on it, believed to be from the year 1344, was unearthed. The sudden excavation of a bonsho from the Northern and Southern Courts Period shows the possibility that the town of medieval Chiba, believed to have been destroyed due to urbanization, could be lying dormant right beneath our feet. このページの情
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(1-6-14 Hon-cho, Chuo Ward) Hon’en-ji Temple is a temple of the Nichiren sect of Buddhism. It is said to be founded by Nichiju, the founder of the Kenpon Hokke Sect (Myomanji School), and Chiba Mitsutane, the shugo (military governor) of Shimosa Province, in the year 1381. Enjoji Tanehisa, a chief vassal of the Chiba clan who devoted himself to Nichiju’s disciple, Nichigi, built the dojo (Buddhist training hall) of the temple. In the Montokoji (“Ancient Records of the Disciples”), it is mentioned that Nichigi went to shugo Chibanosuke’s (thought to be Mitsutane)
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also quite talented at Waka poetry and he was the only successful family head to have had his poetry published in the Imperial Collection of waka poetry, the “shin senzai wakashu”. He died at the young age of 32 in 1365, and it is said that this was the same year in which Kotoku-ji Temple was built. However, Tanetaka was still young at this time and it is believed that after becoming an adult, he constructed the temple in memory of his father. The Hara clan was based in Oyumi Castle, in what is now known as Oyumi-
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, so the spring is also known as “the spring of Fudō”. While its waters have long since dried up, there are two main theories regarding the origins of how this location came to be known as Ochanomizu. The first theory comes from a legend surrounding Minamoto no Yoritomo. In the year 1180, after losing the Battle of Ishibashiyama in Sagami Province (currently Odawara City, Kanagawa Prefecture), Yoritomo went to Awa Province by boat; supported by bands of warriors including the Chiba clan, he regained his strength and entered Kamakura. It is said that, during the journey, Chiba Tsunetane prepared
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an important political and economic in the centre of the Bōsō Peninsula area. For these reasons, the Oyumi region was the target of much contention. In 1517, the Mariyatsutakeda Clan took control of the Oyumi Castle, as they were trying to expand their power within the Shimōsa Province. The following year, Ashikaga Yoshiaki, who was supported by the Mariyatsutakeda Clan, came into power. The influence of Ashikaga Yoshiaki, who was later called Oyumi Kubō, spread throughout southern Kantō and the Oyumi region where he was based, which led to it becoming the political hub of a Kantō in the
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for his father, Yoritane, and the clan’s retainers. Inside the temple premises was a five-tiered gravestone from the mid-15th century attributed to Munetane (currently a Chiba City Cultural Relic); beside it was an aged pine tree known as the gobyo no matsu (“shrine pine tree”). In the year 1945 the temple was burned down because of bombings during the war, and, after the war it was transferred along with the five-tiered gravestone to its current location in Benten, Chuo Ward. Munetane is known for being the ancestor of the Hizen Chiba Clan. His father, Yoritane,
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